Mountain Wanderer Map and Bookstore

About Me

Owner of Mountain Wanderer Map and Book Store and avid hiker for 40 years. Editor of AMC White Mountain Guide and author or co-author of several other White Mountain guidebooks. Member of AMC Four Thousand Footer Committee and WMNF trail adopter.

Saturday, August 18, 2018

SW RIDGE, MOUNT KANCAMAGUS: 8/16/18

An interesting and at times scratchy bushwhack up the SW ridge of Mount
Kancamagus to two sets of cliffs, including a wild, lofty flume at the
K1 Cliff.

The
two cliffs, with the SW cliffs on the right and K1 Cliff on the left,
are seen head-on from a viewpoint on Irene's Path. The "K1" name was
applied by Waterville hikers in the early 1900s; K is for Kancamagus.
The K2 Cliff is farther north.

I
followed Greeley Ponds Trail to its former crossing of the Mad River at
Knight's Bridge, which was washed out. I forded the stream and
continued up a short abandoned section of trail that was severely
gullied by Tropical Storm Irene.

Looking up the Mad River.

The start of the abandoned Flume Brook Trail, also washed out by Irene.

On
the far side of Flume Brook is the Kancamagus Brook Ski Trail, which I
followed a short distance up the valley before heading off-trail up the
SW ridge. The upper part of this ski trail is too wet for summer use.

By
this junction is the brushy clearing of Camp 5, a logging camp used by
the International Paper Co. in the early 1900s and the Parker-Young
Company in the 1930s.

There
are a number of artifacts here, including the top of a cookstove. Note
that it is illegal to remove artifacts from the WMNF; please leave them
for others to see.

This
looked like some type of fuel dispenser, probably for trucks used to
haul wood out in the 1930s, after the conclusion of the river drives era
on the Mad River.

An 82-year old license plate.

Irene destruction along Flume Brook.

This
little cascade on Flume Brook is known as Towle's Falls, named for the
Hon. Geo. M. Towle of Brookline, MA, an early summer visitor to Waterville.

Interesting rock beside the ski trail.

The woods heading up the SW ridge were a mixed bag. Some stretches were pleasantly open.

Other
sections were brushier. I had been up this ridge to the SW cliffs three
times on snowshoes (the first time with Cath Goodwin back in the 90s), so I got a little careless on route planning and
ended up in some thick, bouldery conifer forest instead of the open
hardwoods that were farther to the west.

I pushed through the nasty stuff and eventually found those nice hardwoods.

Heading up a steeper slope to the area of the SW cliffs.

I
cut over too soon and ended up at the base of the cliffs, necessitating
a scramble up a steep gully. Not at the top of my navigation game
today!

Looking down.

There's not much room at the top of the SW cliffs, but I found a small spot behind the edge to relax for a while in the hot sun. A neat wild spot.

The woods thickened
considerably when I branched NW off the ridgecrest towards the top of
the K1 Cliff. I made some use of an old tote road that contoured the slope.

Closer
to the cliff I found another corridor. I wondered if this could be a
trace of the short-lived trail that Watervilleans blazed from Greeley
Ponds Trail to the K1 Cliff in the early 1900s. The 1915 Goodrich map of Waterville showed the trail making a direct ascent, which seems improbable given the terrain. But maybe this was just
another tote road.

The
top of the K1 Cliff is difficult to access due to very steep,
thickly-grown terrain above. Years ago I tried on snowshoes but didn't
get to an open view. Did better today, first dropping my pack and
slithering down to a scrubby opening atop a small crag towards the south
end of the cliff.

Here there was a nice view down the Mad River valley to Sandwich Dome. The northern Flat Mountain and the Lost Pass area could be seen off to the left.

The
main feature I wanted to find was called the Kancamagus Flume by Arthur
L. Goodrich in the 1916 edition of his guidebook to Waterville Valley.
He described it as a "strange cleft in the rock on the western flank of
Kancamagus." It is seen as a dark slash at the upper left of the K1
Cliff in this photo taken from a talus slope on East Osceola.

After
traversing across from the small crag, I carefully worked my way down
to the upper edge of the flume. The scrub here was extremely prickly and
drew some blood.

Peering down into the flume. Some good-sized trees are thriving on its floor.

The upper end of the flume disappears into the forest above.

From
here there was a view across to a backlit East Osceola, with the main
Osceola summit peeking over in back. The spectacular Painted Cliff was
in shadow.